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The Structure of the Genome. Denaturation, Renaturation and Complexity. DNA denaturation (melting). strands held together by weak, noncovalent bonds strands start to separate at specific temperature Within a few degrees, process is complete solution contains single stranded molecules
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The Structure of the Genome Denaturation, Renaturation and Complexity Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
DNA denaturation (melting) • strands held together by weak, noncovalent bonds • strands start to separate at specific temperature • Within a few degrees, process is complete • solution contains single stranded molecules • higher single strand absorbance @ 260 nm • hydrophobic base interactions reduced • bases absorb photons more efficiently • Melting temperature (Tm) is at half denatured • Tm increases with G-C content (%G + %C) • A-T-rich sections melt before G-C-rich segments Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
Figure 10.15 Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
Figure 10.16 Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
DNA renaturation • J. Marmur (Harvard, 1960) – first described • Slowly cool heat-denatured DNA • or drop temperature quickly to ~25°C below Tm & incubate awhile • Complementary single-stranded DNAs can reassociate or reanneal • Renaturation very useful • genome complexity: variety & copy number • hybridization: molecular identification Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
DNA renaturation • Renaturation governed by • Ionic strength of the solution • Temperature • Time • DNA concentration • Size of the interacting molecules Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
Complexity of viral & bacterial genomes • SV40:5.4 x 103 bp T4:1.8 x 105E. coli:4.5 x 106 • Force all DNAs through tiny orifice under high • Random shear ~1000 bp • Reanneal at same DNA concentration (mg/ml) • smaller genome - faster renaturation • more copies of small genomes • Increases chance of collision between complementary fragments • Viral/bacterial genomes - symmetrical curve Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
Figure 10.19 Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
Complexity of eukaryotic genome • Various nucleotide sequences in eukaryotic DNA fragments are present at very different concentrations • first indication that eukaryotic DNA has much more complex organization • Curves show 3 broad DNA sequence classes • differ in copy number Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
Figure 10.20 Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
Highly repetitive DNA • present in at least 105 copies per genome • ~10% of total vertebrate DNA • this fraction reanneals very fast • Usually short (a few 100 bp at most) • Usually in Tandem: over & over uninterrupted Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
Highly repetitive DNA: 3 kinds • Satellite DNAs • 5 to 100’s bp long • repeated vast number of times in tandem; • form very large clusters of up to several million bp • usually unique base composition • “satellite” band in gradient centrifugation Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
Highly repetitive DNA: 3 kinds • Minisatellite DNAs • ~12 - 100 bp long • form clusters of up to 3000 repeats • shorter stretches than satellites • unstable copy number over generations • locus length is highly variable in population • even among family members • polymorphic: used for DNA fingerprinting • polymorphism implicated in cancer & diabetes Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
Highly repetitive DNA: 3 kinds • Microsatellite DNAs • 1 - 5 bp long; present in small clusters of ~50-100 bp long • Scattered evenly throughout DNA • at least 30,000 different loci in human genome • extremely high mutation rate • ethnic polymorphism in human populations • African origin? • African’s should have greater sequence variation • Appears to be true in 60 microsatellites • Involved in inherited diseases (FRAX, Hunt.) Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
HP Figure 1 Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
Where are satellite sequences located? • Mary Lou Pardue & Joseph Gall (Yale) • develop in situ hybridization • used to locate satellites on chromosomes • spread chrmosomes on slide • treat with hot salt solution to separate the strands • treat with labeled satellite DNA probe • Satellite DNAs in centromeric region, telomeres • Fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) – • better resolution than with radiolabel • biotin probe; fluorescent avidin (binds biotin) • map specific sequences along DNA Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
Figure 10.22a Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
Moderately repeated DNA • 20 to 80% of total DNA, depending on organism • Repeated within genome a few times to tens of thousands of times • distinct families • some code for known RNAs or proteins • tRNAs, rRNAs, histone mRNAs • typically identical to one another • located in tandem array • RNAs & histones are needed in large amounts • Histones needed in such large amounts in early development Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
Moderately repeated DNA • Repeated DNAs that lack coding functions • represents bulk of moderately repetitive DNAs • scattered (interspersed) not tandem • SINEs (short interspersed elements) - usually <500 bp long; ex. in humans: Alu • LINEs (long interspersed elements) - usually >1000 bp long; ex. in humans: L1 • Sequences of both vary greatly between species • Functions unknown Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E
Nonrepeated (single copy) DNA • 70% of human DNA fragments of 1000 bp length • Very slow to hybridize • Represent Mendelian genes • Contain code for virtually all proteins but histones • Genes coding for polypeptides • Globins, actins, myosins, collagens, tubulins, integrins, probably most other eukaryote proteins • Each member of multigene family is encoded by different but related nonrepeated sequence Karp/CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 3E